Christians in America, Intro

Jun 26 2009   •   no comments   •   posted in Themes, expressions, issues   •  

Bloggers note: The opinions in this blog do not represent an official position of Park St. Brethren Church. They are correct, but they are my opinions, not necessarily the church’s. :)  Also, when I refer to “Church” from now on, I am referring to the whole community of Jesus-followers, not a particular congregation or organization of believers.

Over the past year, ever since the Presidential Primaries, I have become more and more frustrated and disappointed with the political landscape in America. Along with that comes a similar frustration with the Christian Community and its general confusion about the roles of government and Church.  Last night I was listening to both sides of the debate on the “Cap and Trade” bill and my frustration came to a hard boil as I realized how badly we’re missing the point of government in America. I feel like the beauty of the Constitution, and its foundations, are slipping away and that we will never be able to restore it. I also feel like the beauty of the Gospel, and its power that is independent of national boundaries, is being misrepresented and placed in a cage. Both of these prospects bring great sadness and discouragement to my heart.

As I’ve listened to Christian young adults’ views on government, as they relate to faith and life in America, it has occurred to me that most of you are sincere in wanting to live out your faith in a Godly way in all areas of life and there is a new “passive activism” among you. The activist part shows a heart-felt interest in areas of justice, compassion and renewal in society. The passive part is that you haven’t always invested yourselves in seeking out an understanding of the foundations of Christianity and American government to grasp the complexities and hard work that go along with becoming Christian-Americans with influence. In my opinion, this passive activism is resulting in a handing-over of our God-given role to others whose motives aren’t the same.

There are many people who lack the nerve to mix politics and religion. Some think that Jesus’ lack of direct teaching on the mix sets an example for us to be silent as well. I am compelled to believe that much of his silence was not a signal to keep silent on the mix, but more a sign that He saw all parts of life as related to all other parts. Too many specifics from Him defining separate roles of politics and spirituality would make them seem too disconnected.  I believe that His silence gives us a chance to freely represent him within the messy stew of politics and religion that changes with each age and form of government.

Others are too eager to directly link American political patriotism to Jesus.  Because America has been known as a culturally Christian nation, Americanism and Christianity have become interchangeable for some. Some preachers and authors confuse the two and make Jesus out to be an American.  Other editorialists and politicians use Jesus as the poster child for their programs and positions without really embracing the heart of His message.

Over the next two weeks I need to seek some balance and bedrock in this mess. I want to invite you along in the process as I think aloud.  I believe that there are a few areas where politics and our faith have t0 coexist.  I believe that we spiritual people are called to be political as well when it comes to some very key ideals. I want to put it out there right now that the two, politics and Christianity, come together in a place called liberty (a.k.a freedom). If we understand the spiritual source of this ideal, we will understand our political role in the world. A shared understanding of liberty should unite the Church in its political sense of direction and should make activism not only social but spiritual…and never passive. If young adults can begin to grasp the idea of liberty from God’s perspective, mission and activism will go hand in hand.

Here are some themes I’m going to dice up in the next two weeks:

Good vs. Bad vs. Evil - Before the Fall it was “all good.” The Fall opened a tendency in us to categorize everything into two basic groups: good and bad.  As each of us is decides for ourselves what is good and bad, it creates conflict between us when we don’t agree. When this conflict is left to its own, it’s the seed of all kinds of evil. Laws and governments exist to mediate these conflicts. Politics is about bringing balance to these laws and governments for the common good. Politics is unavoidable.

Rights vs. Privileges - Rights come from God. They define the things in life that He has provided for all people everywhere. They remain the same no matter how a government interprets them or ignores them.  They are not subject to people’s preferences. Privileges are the things in life that we are permitted to enjoy. They can change based on circumstances. They can be given and taken away. We become disappointed when we confuse rights and privileges.

Freedom and Liberty - Where the spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. Freedom and liberty are the states of being 100% able to pursue what is good in life.  Since the Fall has created conflict between people and groups as to what is “good,” God’s brand of freedom calls on us to look out for other people’s rights, not our own. When we reverse the Fall and act on behalf of others’ freedom, our motives are redeemed and good emerges.  The problem is that those that aren’t playing by the same rules create conflict for those who are selflessly looking out for others. While those people can take away our privileges, they can’t kill our freedom. This kind of freedom changes worlds. This is the ideal upon which the Gospel is based and our country was founded.

I hope you’ll be patient and process these ideals with me. I look forward to tons of conversation!


Q Conference Blogversation

May 11 2009   •   no comments   •   posted in Themes, expressions, issues, the Crossing   •  

I am glomming.

Jason Barnhart, my friend and partner-in-ministry is blogging about the different presentations we experienced at the Q Conference in Austin in late April. I am jumping in the conversation by adding a second generation of thoughts and responses as he goes through the different topics. Think of this as the missing scenes or producer’s commentary on a DVD. Consider these the liner notes to Jason’s “music” about Q.

This first post is a bit more about Q and its context…

The Q Conference is organized by Fermi Project. Fermi is “a broad collective of innovators, artists, social entrepreneurs, church and societal leaders experimenting with ways to advance the common good in culture. The focus of this project is strategically placed on Christians and leaders throughout the Church. Multiple mediums are leveraged to push forward the essence of this project, including events, research, essays, films, books and culture shaping projects.” By clicking here, and coughing up your email address, you can download an essay, Influencing Culture: An Opportunity for the Church, developed by Gabe Lyons, Founder of Fermi Project.

The annual Q conference is a convergence of these innovators, artists, social entrepreneurs, church and societal leaders, who share a large scale brain-dump of ideas, dreams and methods for influencing culture.  The trademark of Q Conferences is their 18 minute time limit on almost all presentations.  This makes each session concise and limits the distracting sermonizing and self-aggrandizing that often accompanies conferences.  Other unique characteristics of Q are the relatively small group of attenders (350 -400?), the absolute resistance to Christian celebrity status for presenters, and the very low key, minimalist attention to worship (this year, David Crowder spoke, but didn’t sing. David Hodges, former  member of Evanescence, led worship from the side of the stage, plunking on a keyboard and singing softly. No one was asked to stand or sing louder…).

The Q Conference has convened for three years. Q organizers try to select venues that represent cultural significance in the cities that are culturally significant.  The first was in Atlanta, last year we attended the conference in New York City, this year we descended on Austin.

Q organizer, Gabe Lyons, explains why they chose Austin this year:

“There are just so many reasons. For starters, how about the music scene? Over 200 live music venues that bustle every night with jazz, folk, country, or rock make Austin the Live Music Capital of the World. And the food? It’s hard to top the mouth-watering beef brisket or authentic Tex-Mex you can find on almost any corner. The reasons for choosing Austin could go on: the largest university in the U.S. (go Longhorns!), flourishing arts and film industry, significant high-tech culture, influential political arena, and world-class environmental awareness. All in all, Austin is the perfect city for Q.

It’s also a city that hasn’t gotten too big. In fact, Austin is probably more like the place you live than L.A., Chicago, or New York City ever will be. It boasts no professional sports team and lives in the shadow of the much bigger Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio areas. Moreover, Austinites are trying to figure out how to grow a city well, how to maintain creative culture, and how to make suburban life feel, well, not so suburban. Perhaps the slogan of the city says it all: “Keep Austin Weird.” It’s against that backdrop – a city seeking to maintain and re-express the heart of its identity – that Q 2009 comes to Austin. It’s our prayer that as we gather there, new ideas and fresh expressions of the gospel will be born and cultivated among us.”

So, we arrived in Austin, and as we pulled up to the Paramount Theater, Q’s meeting place in Austin, I was smacked by maybe the most profound moment of the conference.  In front of the theater was a bench. On one end of the bench were two Q participants, drinking Starbucks and going through their participant’s gift bags which were stuffed with books, coffee, a water bottle and other hip booty.  Sitting on the other end of the bench was a lonesome looking homeless man half-shielded from the morning chill by a blue sleeping bag and hoodie.  Seperating Homeless Man from Q Men on the bench was a plastic bag with all of Homeless Man’s possessions in it, along with a gulf of difference and indifference that prevented even a shred of interaction to occur. The ends of the bench could have been ends of the world.  It was a sight symbolic of the church’s struggle to be influential in a world that has drastically lowered its expectations for us to be of any good. It was an irony that seemed lost on too many people at the conference.

This is the context that we gathered in and in which we live in this place and time. Hopefully these scattered points of interest will help bring the test-tube world of Q to the streets where you live.

Shaping Culture at Q Conference


Healthy Sexuality

Feb 10 2009   •   no comments   •   posted in Themes, expressions, issues, the Crossing   •  

Healthiness might be the sexiest attribute in the world. God designed our sexuality so that people who are spiritually, physically, and emotionally healthy are unbelievably attractive at the deepest levels.  While healthy people attract other healthy people, those that are unhealthy attract others who are unhealthy and that’s where God’s plan for our sexuality breaks down into selfishness, drama and abuse. But, people who are spiritually, emotionally and physically healthy are the kind of people that God wants involved in relationships. Their positive sexuality calls to others like them and leads to committed sexual relationships that result in healthy marriages, homes and ministries that honor God.

The following is a novice, incomplete list of ways to get/be/stay healthy inside and out. Some are more weighty than others. Some aren’t very profound. The whole list seems impossible to get right all the time, but it’s worth a try.

Physical Health - Outward Statement of Inner sense of Sexuality.
Your appearance tells a story about you…
- Shower everyday. Water is cheap. You look better and don’t stink.
- Don’t let your hair get that hot-buttered look. Keep it clean.
- Wear deoderant.
- Any clothes that reveal any cracks anywhere should be avoided.
- Guys, really, nobody wants to see your underwear. Ladies, the whaletail eliminates too much mystery. Mystery is good.
- Ladies, do you know what you do to men when you wear garments that have to stretch around something that has anything having to do with a curve? Help a guy out and be a little modest. Keeps you both healthy.
- Guys: know the difference between a date and a workout and dress accordingly.
Watch your mouth. The mouth is the gateway for indication of your physical, emotional, spiritual health.
- Brush your teeth at least twice a day. Nobody wants to smell your road-kill breath or look at those little gray sweaters on your teeth. If brushing doesn’t do the trick carry tick-tacks.
- Drink all the water you can! Hydration makes a lot of things better!
- Don’t put anything in your body that is illegal.
- Don’t drink alcohol if it makes you act stupid, if it’s unsafe, if you HAVE to have it, or if it’s illegal.
- Eat more vegetables and fruit than fat, starch and sugar.
Physical Activity
- Those ideal body weight charts are not a conspiracy or a cruel joke. You feel a lot better when you are within the ideal weight range.
- Get regular exercise. 30 minutes a day. If you like to eat a lot, you gotta exercise more. Exercise hurts and then makes you feel great.
- Have regular sleep patterns.
- Get outside. Get some fresh air and sunshine…Vitamin D from sunshine is a natural upper.
- Be classy. You don’t have to be brilliant or rich to have class.
- Don’t have sex or intimate contact with anyone that isn’t your spouse. No pre-marital romp is worth an STD. Some things are not good to share.

Emotional Health - Inward Reponse to Things That Happen
Some of emotional unhealthy is self-imposed, some is the result of other people:
Get rid of Baggage:
- If others have abused you in the past, do everything you can to work through it and overcome it.
- If people you trust are telling you that you’re screwed up, listen to them…and do something about it.
- Don’t subject yourself to pornography or masturbation…set unreasonable expectations that no one will ever live up to. Creates baggage!
Expand beyond yourself
- Do things that you’re afraid of, as long as they aren’t stupid.
- Read books, especially fiction. Imagination is healthy!
- Be informed…check out the news… being informed is interesting…being interesting is healthy…healthy is attractive
- Get your hands dirty: Help other people as much as possible, Do hard work. Keep a garden
- Do artistic stuff, even if it’s just listening to music.
- Challenge your brain with ideas, puzzles, concepts that are hard.
- Be part of a group of friends. Figure out how to fit in and get a long.
- Surround yourself with upbeat people.  Don’t let yourself get jaded or cynical
- Don’t talk about yourself too much

Spiritual Health: Most important for life and healthy sexuality. It is the bridge between holy and hot romance.
Practice the Reality of God
- Immerse yourself in the story of the Bible. Knowing the story intimately will help you see where you fit.
- Be relentless in asking God to show you His purpose for you.
- Live as if Jesus is with you. (He is)
- Learn to be silent. Listen to/for God constantly.
- Have a Sabbath.
- Be undignified in worship.
Do what Gods says to do
- Be brave when it comes to following Him.
- Feed the hungry. Care for the sick. Visit the lonely. Defend the helpless…Nothing is clearer in the scriptures.
- Talk about God as if He’s the best thing that ever happened to you.
- Go to where people need God and represent Him.
Have Spiritual Relationships
- Join a small group.Allow yourself to laugh and cry with people.
- Learn to forgive
- Pray regularly with other people.
- Let other people more important than you.
- Be accountable to someone older and wiser in the faith.
- Don’t compromise your sexuality. Dedicate it to God and His plan.

After sharing this list at the Crossing yesterday, a couple people mentioned to me that this list of reminded them of a song from the early 2000’s called Everybody’s Free (to wear sunscreen) by Baz Luhrmann. Check out the video below:


Nehemiah - Week 6 - Spiritual Expression

Oct 23 2008   •   no comments   •   posted in Nehemiah - Visioneering, expressions, the Crossing   •  

There’s been a tale of two walls playing out recently:

1) The Tale of Wall St. and its rapid crumbling and tumbling. The toppling is being heard and felt in purses and board rooms all over the world.

2) The Tale of the Wall of the Kingdom, as symbolized by the rebuilding of the wall in Nehemiah. We are seeing our “Wall” being built in really tangible ways around here and it’s not reliant on Wall St.

I don’t want to deny or overlook the seriousness of the economic situation. We have friends who have lost their jobs and parents who are visibly concerned about their shrinking retirement nest-eggs. It’s a shaky, ulcer-giving time for a lot of people who are only a street or phone call away from us.

In spite of all of that, I have this sense of excitement. And I am not a sadist or anything. I believe that it is times like this, like when all that Wall St. stands for is failing, that we turn to depend on God and each other for our existence instead of depending on our country or the dollar or interest-only loans. It is a perfect time for the “Children of God to be revealed.”

I believe that we are starting to see stories come in “from the field” that show that building the Kingdom is taking place. And that the crumbling of Wall St., and other crutches, is actually making the Kingdom more real and more urgent and more miraculous in people’s lives. We are seeing renewal and refreshed sense of identity and confidence as we build the Kingdom Wall in the shadow of the toppling wall of consumerism, materialism and convenience.

What does this have to do with spiritual expression? I’ve sensed for a long time that our Worship lacks guts and nerve and passion because we are approaching God as an intellectual reality. And intellectually realities are not very moving or personal. They don’t live where we do, and they don’t work out crazy, powerful good in our lives.  To be honest, we haven’t sensed any need for God. We have wanted this cosmic pacifier to help us through our neurotic drama, but that where the need stopped. As the Wall St. Wall crashes, we’re starting to see real need for God, and we are becoming real expressions of God’s love and liberation for people in all kinds of need.

So, here’s how worship (or Spiritual Expression) was meant to work and is starting to work…When our world starts to lose its sense of security and comfort, we are called to bring a sense of security and comfort to it, as extensions of God’s love and power. When we become part of real stories where we see that process in action, where we actually are depending on God to do and be what only He can do and be in these situations, where we are depending God to come through or else someone dies, we recognize that He is at work. And He becomes alive to us. And we gather to talk about what He’s really done in our lives - things like parting the financial seas, like healing desperate relationships, like finding peace in turmoil, like finding a God that loves us - we naturally worship Him as if we’ve finally awakened to the fact that He is real.

Honest spiritual expression is an acknowledgment the reality of the living God in our lives.  Worship is a response, not a duty or a pleading.  It is the coming together to tell and enjoy stories that show God and us working together in ways that matter and that change things. As our trust in the Walls of materialism, money, government, consumerism fail us, let us down, and fall on us, we find that the Kingdom of God and its walls growing. And it is amazing enough to draw out our praise for the King of the Kingdom.

I hope you’ll check back soon to get a link to some real, local stories and expressions of God working among us as we become His Living Wall. I hope it draws honest worship from all of us!


Nehemiah - Week 3 - Vision

Sep 26 2008   •   no comments   •   posted in Nehemiah - Visioneering, Themes, the Crossing   •  

On Sunday, we relived the the last half of Nehemiah, Chapter 2 and all of Nehemiah Chapter 3. We looked on as Nehemiah quietly checked out the devastation of the Jerusalem Wall, and then went to the leaders of the area to inspire them to start rebuilding.  Then we saw how the job was divided up into sections of the wall and gates.  Whole families and groups saw the overall vision of the rebuilding job, and then took their part seriously enough to get to work.  We even saw that the High Priest was hauling rocks and slinging mortar.  The vision of Nehemiah became a rallying point that everyone embraced and dived into with passion.

A few thoughts come to mind.  A couple are phrases about vision that have been rolling around in my head since my former life as a bush league church and business consultant:

Without vision the people perish. - the Bible

If you don’t know where you’re going, any road will get you there. - Some Wise Dude

It seems true that if there is no clear vision or specific picture of what God is calling us to, we humans just kind of get mired down in the drama of existing.  We have nothing to pull us forward and together so we get stagnant and aimless.  I don’t think that God has EVER called us to stagnation and aimlessness!

So, we too, here in Ashland, Ohio, need a vision for all of us and a vision for each of us. A vision for the whole wall and a vision for our individual gates.

Some of us have been reading Andy Stanley’s book, Visioneering and in it he says that a real vision will require the communication of four important things : The Problem, The Solution, Why Something Must Be Done, and Why Something Must Be Done Now.

Here are my thoughts on how this plays out in the here and now:

The Problem:
We have convinced ourselves that the way it is is the way it’s gonna be. And we wait for others to lead. People say that “it is what it is” but the problem is that we should all be saying…”it is not as it should be.”

  • People around us in this community are dying a slow, numbing death because they aren’t aware of the freedom and hope that Jesus and His people bring. Even we here have allowed this lack of passion for Christ and this indifference toward our purpose to put us to sleep. We are settling for much less than god wants to share with us, and we are not fulfilling our role to show this life to other people.
  • We are okay with just kind of looking out for ourselves and our own sense of satisfaction when we don’t realize that the most satisfying thing we will ever do is take part in looking out for other people and taking care of them.

The Solution
God is calling us to take responsibility for the spiritual, social and cultural well-being of our community. He has equipped us with everything we need to do the job except for the desire and confidence to do it.

  • We can bring words and acts of love that heal people’s spirits and set them free.
  • We can put our hands to work in becoming an answer to our own prayers and to those who are needy and hopeless. We can feed the hungry, visit the lonely, bring care and prayer to the sick, help the unemployed find jobs, and bring light to the depressed.
  • We can use our creativity and imagination and sensitivity to create art, music, food, entertainment and business to our community that bears the mark of life and that restores joy and beauty and interest to our surroundings. We can not only bring the life of Christ to people but also our culture.
  • We can lend leadership and support to this effort. Our community sits and looks to others to lead into new expressions of hope and thriving…We are the people this community has been waiting for!

Why Something Must be Done?
People in our neighborhood are becoming too familiar with indifference and resignation to a bland existence without the adrenaline rush of hope and energy and passion and purpose that comes from knowing Christ and living out His dreams for our lives. This indifference is not how it has to be and is actually a huge weapon of the Enemy to take away our identity and to disarm us. He is sucking life away and we can’t stand for it. People are choosing spiritual sleep instead of life. We have to make a choice ourselves to snap out of it and then begin to breath the life of Christ into everything around us.

Why Something Must be Done Now
Our neighborhood has never been more ripe and the time has never been more perfect for the Children of God to be revealed in this city than right now. All of the things that we have depended on for life are wearing thing and giving out:

  • National security, economy, weather, politics, environment, poverty, health, depression are all concerns that have us feeling worried and hopeless.
  • People are looking for real and lasting meaning and purpose, and we have the message and ideas that they are looking for. People inside and outside out faith need a breath of fresh air that comes from people who know Christ and are motivated by the power that comes from His hope and freedom.
  • We need people to find their roles in this, their section of the wall or gate. It takes everyone and it takes each of us working together.

We need people to step forward and stop waiting for leaders of the church or of the government to get things started. It’s time for ownership and leadership to do things like:

  • Organize community gatherings, build new relationships, bring ideas alive that revitalize our neighborhood and the people in it,
  • Find the cracks in that wall and do something about it.
  • Make all of life wrapped around this!

So, here are some questions for each of us:

  • Where do you fit in?
  • Where do you see yourself fitting into this overall picture of renewing our neighborhood and community?
  • What will it take for you to step out sleepy existence into passionate purpose?

Stay tuned…this Sunday we’ll talk about the importance of spiritual development and we pursue our vision.  We’ll emphasize the importance of having each other’s backs and keeping each other sharp spiritually.


Nehemiah - Week 2 - Positive Presence

Sep 17 2008   •   no comments   •   posted in Nehemiah - Visioneering, Themes, the Crossing, updates   •  

On Sunday we gathered around the idea of “positive presence” which is a short way of saying “making and being in relationships with people who are not part of the church.” We continued to use the story of Nehemiah (Ch 2:1-10) to show how a person who is trusted, close, and respectful to those who are in places of influence can actually work with that influence to make things more like God wants them.

Positive presence and relationships go a couple different ways. First, they are individual. It should be a totally natural thing for each of us to connect with people who don’t believe or even act the same as we do. I mentioned on Sunday that people who don’t live or believe the way we do will never care about our beliefs or lifestyle unless they know that we care for them and like them as friends. We need to be a positive presence within their lives and hearts if we are to have any chance at loving them as completely as we should.

Relationships are also cultural. I mentioned on Sunday that we cannot change something that we’re not involved with.  People outside of Christianity don’t seek guidance or direction from Christians or from the Bible. They are influenced, for the most part, by things like the media, entertainment, education, arts, government, science, etc.  If Christians are to have a chance at changing the world for good, we have to influence culture. To do that, we have to be part of the things that drive the culture.  We need to be a positive presence within the world culture.  We need to be positively present in news rooms, locker rooms, studios, court rooms, executive suites, classrooms and laboratories.

I want to punctuate this week’s conversation and look to next week’s discussion with words that have had a big impact on me. A few weeks back we shared a 2nd Century description of early Christians who were making their presence know in Greece, Rome and Jerusalem in very positive ways. These writings not only express the positive reputation of early Christians, but they also sketch a vision of the Church as it is still meant to be today. These words are from The Epistle to Diognetus:

For the Christians are distinguished from other men neither by country, nor language, nor the customs which they observe. For they neither inhabit cities of their own, nor employ a peculiar form of speech, nor lead a life which is marked out by any singularity. The course of conduct which they follow has not been devised by any speculation or deliberation of inquisitive men; nor do they, like some, proclaim themselves the advocates of any merely human doctrines. But, inhabiting Greek as well as barbarian cities, according as the lot of each of them has determined, and following the customs of the natives in respect to clothing, food, and the rest of their ordinary conduct, they display to us their wonderful and confessedly striking method of life. They dwell in their own countries, but simply as sojourners. As citizens, they share in all things with others, and yet endure all things as if foreigners. Every foreign land is to them as their native country, and every land of their birth as a land of strangers. They marry, as do all [others]; they beget children; but they do not destroy their offspring. They have a common table, but not a common bed. They are in the flesh, but they do not live after the flesh. They pass their days on earth, but they are citizens of heaven. obey the prescribed laws, and at the same time surpass the laws by their lives. They love all men, and are persecuted by all. They are unknown and condemned; they are put to death, and restored to life. They are poor, yet make many rich; they are in lack of all things, and yet abound in all; they are dishonored, and yet in their very dishonor are glorified. They are evil spoken of, and yet are justified; they are reviled, and bless; they are insulted, and repay the insult with honor; they do good, yet are punished as evil-doers. When punished, they rejoice as if quickened into life; they are assailed by the Jews as foreigners, and are persecuted by the Greeks; yet those who hate them are unable to assign any reason for their hatred.


Nehemiah - Week 1 - The Wall

Sep 10 2008   •   no comments   •   posted in Nehemiah - Visioneering, Themes, the Crossing   •  

To see our video on this topic, click here:  Our Wall

Sunday we gave the back-story of The Wall that plays such a big role in the story of Nehemiah. We barely touched on Nehemiah, the man. He’ll show up in the conversation next week…

(One thing to get out of the way right off the top: this whole study will make SO much more sense if you actually read the book of Nehemiah. If you haven’t already done so and you want to get caught up, please go here and read chapter one.  I talked to some people who sort of didn’t pick up on everything we were trying to communicate yesterday and I found out they hadn’t read the chapter in advance. I think if you read it, some lights will come on.)

For God’s people in Nehemiah’s time (400’s BC), the wall of Jerusalem was more of a “who” than a “what.”  The Wall surrounded the entire city and it created a sense of identity, community and security for God’s people. Don’t get me wrong…it wasn’t like the wall was an idol or that it took the place of God. It was more a symbol of God’s promises and love for the people. It really defined God’s people and their culture.

The people of that day didn’t view walls as we do today. In this day of individuality and personal liberty, we see walls as negative symbols of division or as barriers. This wasn’t the case for Nehemiah’s people. The wall was them. When Nehemiah heard from a distant city that Jerusalem was attacked by the enemy of God’s people and that the wall was destroyed, he mourned and wept, much as we did when we watched the World Trade Center’s towers come down at the hands of terrorists. A part of us died, and so it was with Nehemiah’s people. It shook them to the roots and left them exiled, devastated, or enslaved.  Nehemiah could have just shot a few sincere prayers in the direction of Jerusalem for healing, or he could have said “Our strength is in God, not the wall. Good riddance!” But after a time of contemplation and mourning over all that the wall meant, he was moved by compassion to lead a rebuilding project that would restore the identity of God’s people. And God honored Nehemiah’s plan!

To bring this historical story to life here in this place and time, we need to understand what parts of our culture have the same significance for us that the wall had for Nehemiah’s people.  In the Ashland area, what represents our sense of identity and security and life? What makes us feel connected to God? What reminds us that He is with us and that we are part of His ever-growing, ever-greening Kingdom? Those things make up our wall. The enemy, Satan,  has destroyed so much of this Wall that represents life and growth in our area.  Many of our churches are declining and stagnant. Thousands of jobs have evaporated. Shops and stores have closed down. Young people are moving out of the city. Morals and decency have decayed. We have a pessimistic outlook when it comes to our future and even we Christians seem to have a shriveled, skeptical view of our role here.

If we believe that our mission on earth is to be part of God’s Kingdom and to join Him in making “all things new again” we should be mourning and devastated about the souls and spirits of our people that seem to be dying or losing hope. God invites us into a season of loss. To think of the life that was meant for this city in comparison to the reality we tend to settle for. He wants us to remember His original dreams for His creation and to be aware that the enemy has invaded and has devastated and has lulled us into apathy and has dragged us into captivity.

We need to awaken to the news that our wall has fallen. Weep. Pray. Fast. That moment of somber reflection will make room for compassion and a groaning for God’s dreams to be restored in our city. And I pray that it will move us to lead that restoration.

To see our video on this topic, click here:  Our Wall